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National English Program
in Basic Education Second Language: English
Syllabus 2011
Cycle 2 3rdand 4thElementary school
Phase of expansion
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TABLEOFCONTENTS
Presentation
Introduction
Purposes
Curricular Standards
English Teaching Approach
Assessment
Content organization
3rdgrade Elementary school
4thgrade Elementary school
Bibliography
Teaching guidelines
5
13
17
19
25
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51
63
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5
PRESENTATION
The legal principles established in Article 3 of the Mexican Constitution, the ed-
ucational transformation encouraged by the 2007-2012 National Development
Plan(Plan Nacional de Desarrollo) and the objectives outlined in the2007-2012 Edu-
cation Sector Program(Prosedu: Programa Sectorial de Educacin) have established
the leading basis to provide direction and sense to the actions in public education
policies in Mexico.
Within this framework and based on the attributions granted by the General Law of
Education (Ley General de Educacin), the Secretariat of Public Education (Secretara
de Educacin Pblica) proposed as one of Prosedus fundamental objectives to be
achieved by 2012 to raise the quality of education so that students improve their level
of educational achievement, have a means of accessing to a better well-being and thus,
contribute to the national development.1The main strategy for attaining such objective
in Basic Education is to carry out an Integral Reform in Basic Education, focused on
the adoption of an educational model based on competencies that corresponds to the
developmental needs of Mexico in the XXIcentury,2
envisaging a greater articulationand efficiency among Preschool, Elementary and Secondary school.
1SEP(2007), Programa Sectorial de Educacin, Mxico, p. 11.2 Ibidem, p. 24.
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Prosedu has also established that the criteria for quality improvement in educa-
tion must be applied to teacher training, the updating of curricula and syllabus contents,
pedagogical approaches, teaching methods, and didactic resources.3Simultaneously,
Unesco4has indicated that educational systems are to prepare students in order to
face the new challenges of a globalized world, in which the contact among multiplelanguages and cultures becomes more and more common every day. In this context,
the educational system is compelled to help students understand the diverse cultural
expressions in Mexico and the world.
It is from this perspective that the Secretariat of Basic Education acknowledges
the necessity to incorporate English as a subject to the curricula of preschool and el-
ementary education, as well as to make suitable adjustments to the English subject cur-
ricula in secondary school, with the purpose of articulating the teaching of English in all
three levels of Basic Education. By means of this articulation, it is expected that by the
time students complete their secondary education, they will have developed the neces-
sary plurilingual and pluricultural competences to successfully face the communicative
challenges of a globalized world, build a broader vision of the linguistic and cultural
diversity of the world, and thus, respect their own culture as well as that of others.
In order to carry out the actions that enable the articulation of English teaching, the
Secretariat of Public Education has implemented the National English Program in Basic
Education (NEPBE,or PNIEB: Programa Nacional de Ingls en Educacin Bsica) from
which syllabuses for the three levels of Basic Education are derived. Such syllabuses
are devised based on the alignment and standardization of national and international
standards, the selection of criteria for teacher training, the establishment of guidelines
for the design and evaluation of educational materials, as well as the certification of
English language proficiency.
As shown in the following chart, the NEPBEincludes diverse in-class testing stages
and phases of expansion for its generalization, which aim at collecting data that may
offer valuable information regarding the pertinence of the approach, the contents of the
syllabuses, as well as the organization and articulation of them among the four cycles
of the NEPBE.
3 Ibidem, p. 11.4Delors, J.et al. (1996), La educacin encierra un tesoro. Informe a la Unesco de la Comisin Internacional
sobre la Educacin para el siglo XXI, Madrid, Santillana/Ediciones Unesco, pp. 31 y ss.
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NEPBEin-class testing stages and phases of expansion
STAGE
OR
PHASE
SCHOOLYEAR 2009-2010 2010-2011 2011-2012
First in-class testing
stage.
Cycle 1
(Preschool 3rdgrade,
Elementary 1stand 2nd
grades).
Phase of expansion for
generalization.
First phase of
expansion of Cycle 1
(Preschool 3rdgrade,
Elementary 1stand 2nd
grades).
Second in-class testing
stage.
Cycle 2 (Elementary 3rd
and 4th grades).
Phase of expansion for
generalization.
Second phase of
expansion of cycle 1.
First phase ofexpansion cycles 2
and 3.
Third in-class testing
stage.
Cycle 4 (Secondary
1st, 2nd and 3rd grades).
The aforementioned stages and phases will enable the collection of data regard-
ing the support that teachers need in order to develop the expected competencies and
learning outcomes, as well as the implications the new curricular proposal has in the
school organization. This way, it will be possible to assess curricula, both academically
and pedagogically, and incorporate the necessary adjustments before they are general-
ized in preschool and elementary schools. In addition, the results of this experience will
allow to provide better resources for the generalization of the curricular reform in all the
Elementary schools of the country.
From the curricular reforms carried out in Preschool (2004), Secondary school
(2006) and Elementary school (2009), the following leading principles were established
from the curricular articulation in Basic Education:
a) Basic Education graduates profile, which reflects the proficiency level that a stu-dent must hold when graduating. Each and every subject of preschool, elementary
and secondary levels should aim to help students achieve this profile.
b) The competencies for life that must be developed during the three levels of Basic
Education in order to participate in society and solve practical problems, thus im-
proving life and coexistence standards in an increasingly complex society.
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c) Curricular achievements indicate progress made by students; they express the ex-
pected competency level of development, and they provide a synthetic description
of the knowledge, skills, attitudes, and values students can achieve after having
studied one or more content units in a subjects curriculum.
Consequently, since the incorporation of English as a subject is stated in the
Integral Reform in Basic Education, curricular approaches previously carried out in
preschool, elementary and secondary school are mentioned repeatedly throughout
the current document.
On the other hand, in terms of English as a particular subject, it is worth stressing
that the contemporary society, predominantly governed by information and communi-
cation technologies, requires citizens with the competencies needed to insert them-
selves within a globalized changing world. Basic Education is responsible for providing
students with the opportunity to develop these competencies. Thus, in order to accom-
plish the aforementioned, it assumes the need for students to acquire some fundamen-
tal skills, such as the use and command of these technologies and the command of at
least one non-native language.
From this perspective, the 2007-2012 National Development Plan, in Axis 3,
Equal Opportunities, points out as its twelfth objective: To promote the integral edu-
cation of people in the complete educational system and indicates that [for educa-
tion] to be complete, it should address, along with the abilities to learn, to apply, and
to develop knowledge, the appreciation for ethical values, good citizenship, history,
art and the culture, and languages5. Likewise, PNDproposes as a measure to reduce
the disparity in the quality between private and public schools that the latter should
offer the possibility to study extracurricular subjects related with sports, arts, culture
and languages.6
At present, the teaching of English in Basic Education within the Mexican public
educational system is only compulsory in secondary schools. However, significant ef-
forts have been made to include the English language subject within the elementary
education during the last few years.
In the national context, the endeavor carried out by 21 federal entities in generating
their own English programs for elementary education is acknowledged. However, the
fact that these are not at a national level has made their operation extremely heteroge-neous in aspects such as coverage, achievement levels, types of contents addressed,
as well as teaching hours. In some cases, this has hindered the continuity of proposals
5 Presidencia de la Repblica (2007), Plan Nacional de Desarrollo 2007-2012, Mxico, p. 190.6 Ibidem, p. 178.
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in subsequent educational levels. This situation has generated the need to design syl-
labuses for the teaching of English based on current regulations (not only for secondary
schools but also for preschool and for all grades of elementary education) and to cre-
ate conditions so that these can operate with equity and quality in all Basic Education
schools in the country.To respond to this need and based on what PNDand Prosedu have established the
2011 Curricular Map for Basic Education opens two spaces for the teaching of Eng-
lish: preschool and elementary education. Since English is part of the educational field
of Language and Communication, this is integrated into the curricular map as Second
Language: English. Thereby, it assures its consistency with the subject of Spanish and
its articulation with preschool, elementary, and secondary education. As shown in the
following curricular map, the English subject thus has, for the first time in its history, a
place within the Basic Education curricula.
The fact that the Elementary School Reform which came into effect during the
school year 2009-2010 includes the teaching of English, undoubtedly represents
some progress. However, the possibility of putting this teaching into practice is lim-
ited by the shortage of teachers trained for this purpose.
Therefore, it is worth explaining that the in-class testing stages and phases of ex-
pansion for the syllabuses of English in Basic Education follow a different scheme from
those of other subjects. This can be seen in a couple of distinctive features:
1. Their design is organized by cycles and not by school grades, which guarantees
continuity and articulation in the different grades and levels in Basic Education.
Thus, the program for Cycle 1 comprises 3rdgrade of Preschool, and 1stand 2nd
grades of Elementary school; Cycle 2 includes 3rd and 4th grades of Elementary
school; Cycle 3, 5thand 6thgrades, while Cycle 4 includes 1st, 2ndand 3rdgrades of
Secondary school.
2. They are open and flexible, since they offer guided sequences of contents that en-
able the teacher to carry out the adaptations demanded by specific scenarios of
the complex Mexican educational system reality:
Contents are basic and they are defined by two main categories: Social prac-
tices of the language and specific competencies with the language. This al-lows contents to be covered according to the learning progress of the stu-
dents and the needs that communicative situations demand to tackle such
contents. Thus, the relationship between contents and their transversal read-
ing is guaranteed.
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DIGITAL
SKILLS
CURRICULAR
STANDARDS11st SCHOOLPERIOD 2ndSCHOOLPERIOD 3rdSCHOOLPERIOD 4th SCHOOLPERIOD
EDUCATIONAL
FIELDSFORBASICEDUCATION
PreschoolSecondary school
1st 2nd 3rd 1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th 6th 1st 2nd 3rd
LANGUAGEANDCOMMUNICATION
Language and communication Spanish I, II & III
Second
Language:
English2
Second Language: English
I, II & III2
MATHEMATICALTHINKING
Mathematical thinking Mathematics I, II & III
EXPLORING ANDUNDERSTANDING
THENATURALANDSOCIAL
WORLD
Exploration and knowledgeof the world
Exploration
of Nature and
Society
Science I
(emphasis
on Biology)
Science II
(emphasis
on Physics)
Science III
(emphasison
Chemistry)
Physical development
and health
The
state
where
I live
Geography3
Technology I, II & III
Geographyof Mexicoand theworld
History I & II
History3State
subject
PERSONALDEVELOPMENT
AN DDEVELOPMENT
FORCOEXISTENCE
Personal and social
development
Civic and Ethics
I & II
Tutoring
Physical Education I, II & III
Artistic expression and
appreciation
The Arts I, II, & III (Music,
Dance, Theatre or Visual
Arts)
1 Curricular Standards for: Spanish, Mathematics, Science, Second Language: English, and ICT Skills.2 For students who are speakers of an indigenous language, Spanish and English are considered second languages to the mother tongue. Second Language: English is in process towards its generalization.3 They foster the learning of Technology.4 They create educational links with Natural Sciences, Geography, and History.
Spanish
Second Language: English2
Mathematics
Natural Sciences3
Civics and Ethics4
Physical Education4
Artistic Education4
Elementary school
2011 CURRICULARMAP FOR BASICEDUCATION
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From this perspective, the Basic Education program for English teaching faces the
challenge of redefining its object of study so that the selection, presentation, and orga-
nization of contents is feasible to the social practices of the language both, in school
and out-of-school contexts. It is worth mentioning that the social practices of the lan-
guage and the specific competencies with the English languagepresented throughoutthe four cycles of the NEPBE, acknowledge the disciplinary underpinnings and learning
contents of the subject.
The aforementioned, as well as the in-class testing and expansion stages of the
curricular guidelines will allow the opportunity to have progressively enough teachers
with the required qualifications for the appropriate teaching of the subject in the levels
prior to secondary education.
Secretariat of Public Education
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INTRODUCTION
From Cycle 2 and on, the National English Program in Basic Education (NEPBE)
syllabuses state that students acquire progressively the necessary basic com-
municative competencies, so as to enable them to successfully take part in social
practices of the language that involve the interaction with oral and written texts in
common situations.
Reflections on English language learning1
Knowledge of a non-native language is more generalized than it is recognized. Differ-
ent processes like migration, contact between different cultures in the same country
or across borders has brought about the need to communicate in a language different
from ones own. Nowadays, the intense interactions among countries in political, eco-
nomic, and cultural contexts, as well as the boundless flow of information demand a
certain level of bilingualism or multilingualism. Mexico is no exception; despite beingconceived as a homogeneously monolingual country, there are different levels of bilin-
gualism, particularly among those who have a native language different from Spanish.
1Este apartado parte del documento SEP(2006), Reforma de la Educacin Secundaria. Fundamentacin
curricular. Lengua Extranjera. Ingls, Mxico, pp. 9-10.
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There are two processes by which it is possible to achieve bilingualism at some point:
acquisition and learning. The former refers to an unconscious process where the need
for communication and the constant exposure to a specific language allow the learner to
communicate in that language, called target language; this happens with people who mi-
grate to another country and acquire the language in a similar way to that of their mothertongue. Learning, on the other hand, is a conscious study of the target language, usually
with fewer opportunities of exposure to it and in formal environments, like school.
For decades, the teaching of non-native languages has sought ways to re-cre-
ate the acquisition process in the classroom and several methods have been created
for that purpose. Today we know that these methods are successful only in situations
where the time of exposure to the target language is similar or longer to the time they
are in touch with their mother tongue. In contexts where that condition is not met, as in
Mexican public Basic Education, it is necessary to look for options to optimize the non-
native languagelearning process.
In this sense, several private institutions, particularly British, Australian, and Ameri-
can (known as the BANA2group) have created different methods which have been trans-
ferred to the public education context, as happened in Mexico in 1993 with the imple-
mentation of the communicative approach in secondary schools. This transfer poses
problems that are not usually easy to solve, such as the lack of resources and condi-
tions for its implementation; besides, it ignores the traditions and cultures particular to
the context where the method will be applied, which are more strongly rooted than any
innovation. Therefore, nowadays the debate over non-native language teaching does
not focus on looking for ideal methods, but on developing suitable methodologies for
particular contexts.
On the other hand, one of the main references for defining the contents in the
NEPBEwhich establish the minimum level of language proficiency (achievement stan-
dards) students must graduate from Cycles 2, 3, and 4 is the Common European
Framework of Reference for Languages: learning, teaching, assessment (CEFR), pro-
posed by the Council of Europe. It is so that the contents of the NEPBEwere selected
and organized according to the descriptors of the target level (B1 Threshold in the CEFR)
to be reached by the end of Basic Education.
Regarding the contents of the Syllabuses for Cycle 2 aimed at students of 3 rd
and 4th
grade of Elementary school these were designed taking into account the Syl-labuses for Cycle 1 of the NEPBE, the CEFRdescriptors for level A1 (Breakthrough), and
levels 2, 3, and 4 established by the National Certification of Language Level (CENNI).
2For more information regarding BANAgroup, consult Adrian Holiday (1997),Appropiate methodology and
social context, United Kingdom, Cambridge University Press, p. 93.
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For this reason, it is necessary that teachers in Cycle 2 recognize what children al-
ready know about the language and do with the language (for instance, context clues,
like gestures, signals, tone of voice, etc., in oral interaction; iconography and layout, etc. in
a written text), so that they are able to participate with guidance in real-life or life-like social
practices in the English language that allow them to recognize and acquire the tools to:
Participate successfully in interactions that involve production and interpretation of
oral and written texts in English within different social learning environments (famil-
iar and community, literary and ludic, and educational and academic).
Understand the characteristics of the English language appropriately.
Accept a bigger responsibility for their learning process.
Since English is not present in many of the students social environments, school
is quite often the only space where they have a chance to learn a non-native language.
As a result, it is important that the school creates the necessary conditions to foster
oral and written communicative situations where English is used for academic, social,
literary, and ludic purposes.
At the same time, teachers responsible for teaching English in Cycle 2 face the
challenge of guaranteeing the use of suitable teaching strategies that enable students
to access and interact with the English language through plurilingual interculturality.3
The aforementioned involves assuming that the students have the knowledge and
skills in oral and written language and that they are able to become true language users;
because of this, it is fundamental that teachers and school authorities have high expec-
tations about what the students can achieve during the non-native language learning
process. In this sense, it is important to mention that:
The learner of a second or foreign language and culture does not cease to be compe-
tent in his or her mother tongue and the associated culture. Nor is the new competence
kept entirely separate from the old. The learner does not simply acquire two distinct,
unrelated ways of acting and communicating. The language learner becomesplurilin-
gualand developsinterculturality. The linguistic and cultural competences in respect
of each language are modified by knowledge of the other and contribute to intercul-
tural awareness, skills and know-how.4
3Council of Europe (2002), The Common European Framework of Reference for Languages: Learning, Tea-
ching, Assessment, Instituto Cervantes (trad.), Madrid, Ministerio de Educacin, Cultura y Deporte-Subdi-
reccin General de Cooperacin Internacional/Secretara General Tcnica del MECD-Subdireccin General
de Informacin y Publicaciones/Anaya, p. 10. Available at: http://cvc.Cervantes.Es/obref/marco.4 Ibidem, p. 43.
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The NEPBEacknowledges that communicative competence is more than just de-
coding, finding correspondence between sounds and letters or between reading and
writing of isolated and decontextualized units (for instance, words and sentences).
For this reason, it is necessary that teachers make the classrooms attractive and
interesting places for learning, so that all students can have opportunities to share theirexperiences and knowledge about reading, writing, and oral exchanges in the English
language. By doing so, they will identify linguistic aspects and uses of English, as well
as similarities and differences between English and their mother tongue.
Communicating successfully in speaking or writing involves a complex process to
use the language (knowledge, skills, and attitudes) with different purposes in different
social environments. From this point of view:
Reading is not decoding, it is giving meaning, it is understanding; writing is not copying
or having good handwriting; writing is creating a text. Restricting the creative and marvel-
ous experience that texts provide to generate thoughts, feelings, and emotions is depriv-
ing children from a unique life experience []. Acquisition and use are part of a unique
process that has permanent feedback. For this reason [...] there is always a functional
context for reading and writing, for active participation in writing as a social practice, for
instance, checking the students list to see who is absent, writing down the name of their
favorite games and some characteristics, preparing a greeting card, re-writing a short
story, describing an animal or completing a table to register the growth of the plants in
the classroom.5
5Free translation by the National English Coordination of an extract taken from P. Prez Esteve y F. Zayas
(2007), Competencias en comunicacin lingstica, Madrid, Alianza Editorial, p. 154.
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PURPOSES
The purpose of English language teaching in Basic Education is for students to get the
necessary knowledge to engage in social practices with written and oral language to
interact with native and non-native English speakers by means ofspecific competencies
with the language. This entails using activities that involve production and interpretation of
spoken and written texts of a familiar, academic and literary nature so the students will
be able to satisfy basic communication needs in different every day, familiar and known
situations. For this reason, children need to learn to use the language to organize their
thoughts and their speech, to analyze and solve problems, and to gain access to different
cultural expressions from both, their own and other countries. Besides, it is essential that
they identify the role language plays in the construction of knowledge and cultural values.
Furthermore, children should develop an analytical and responsible attitude to face the
problems that affect our world. Competence in the English language does not stem from
mere repetition or exposure to it for a long time. Most importantly, it is necessary to have
a variety of individual and collective experiences that include different ways to participate
in oral exchanges and in text reading and writing.Therefore, the school whose responsibility is higher in the case of students that
come from communities with low literacy and with scarce or non-existent contact with
the English language should provide the necessary conditions for students to partici-
pate in such experiences, to reach gradual autonomy in their intellectual work, and to
be able to transfer what they have learnt in the classroom context to out-of-the-class-
room communicative situations.
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Purpose of English language teaching for Cycle 2
The purpose of English language teaching for Cycle 2 in Basic Education (3 rdand 4th
grades of Elementary school) is for students to acquire the necessary knowledge to un-
derstand and use English in order to recognize, understand, and use common expres-sions through the development ofspecificcompetenciesparticular tosocial practices
of the languagerelated to the production and interpretation of oral and written texts,
pertaining to the Familiar and community, Literary and ludic, and Academic and educa-
tional environments. At the end of this cycle, students are expected to:
Express simple opinions and requests in familiar contexts.
Recognize basic instructions, information, and advertisements.
Identify basic aspects of pronunciation and vocabulary used in everyday life contexts.
Use expressions to refer to personal aspects and needs.
Respond to spoken and written language in different linguistic and non-linguistic ways.
Use different strategies to solve everyday problems, as well as to look for informa-
tion about concrete topics.
Identify similarities and differences between their own cultural expressions and
those of the English language.
Establish basic social contact by means of their linguistic repertoire.
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CURRICULARSTANDARDS
The standards set forth in this chapter reflect the principles established in the Curricu-
lum for Basic Education in Mexico, which demands a commitment to:
Diversity.
The development of self-confidence in young people.
The development of willingness to learn.
Activities based on collaboration.
Problem-solving and a boost towards harmony in social relations.
Standards for Language and Communication (English) provide a model for the
attainment of communicative competences for young people in the XXIcentury, within
a rich cultural context (national and international). In particular, these standards pro-
vide a basis for exploring the role of language and other ways of communication in
the cultural and social life of young people, as they progress through the education
system and their knowledge of the world.The national and international standards described here complement the existing
structures in relation to the principles and competences set out in the curriculum for
Basic Education. Particularly, attention is focused on the what of curricular standards:
knowledge, skills and attitudes expected at different key stages.
The focus on speaking, reading and writing is uncontroversial in any curriculum.
However, it is important to establish that, being English a compulsory second language
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in the curriculum, receptive skills (listening and reading) are particularly important.
Therefore, listening and reading get a different status than speaking and writing.
Such as listening and speaking are closely linked, as well as reading and writing, the
curriculum should ensure that these connections are drawn to the teaching and learning
context. From this perspective, it is important to mention that listening and reading areregarded as receptive language skills, while speaking and writing as language produc-
tion skills.
Therefore, it is feasible to take advantage of the relation between reading and
speaking (as in reading aloud), and writing and listening (for example, providing support
to the process of writing in groups or listening to the presentation of an in-process or
final language product).
In addition, there are two other dimensions in the educational field of language and
communication to be included: multimodality and knowledge about the language and com-
munication. Other ways of communication include still and moving images, physical move-
ment such as dance, gestures and non-verbal language.
The proposed standards aim to minimize the differences children face when they
leave the family environment and enroll to the school system by providing a solid foun-
dation for the future progress through the education system. The basic principles of oral
and written language, as well as the construction of knowledge and cultural values are
established to build the basis that enables experience and knowledge acquired in one
language to be enriched and developed with the experience and knowledge obtained
through another language in order to develop an analytical and responsible attitude
towards problems affecting the country and the world.
Standards for English in Elementary School (1)
Unlike the standards for the previous stage, the ones that correspond to this stage,
as well as the two stages that follow, were constructed based on national and in-
ternational criteria of common reference. These standards do not only reflect the
competencies identified in the first three years of the curriculum, but they also show
the level of competence and proficiency in English which correspond to Level 2 of
the National Certificate for Language Level (Cenni) and level A1 established by theCommon European Framework of Reference for Languages: learning, teaching, as-
sessment (CEFR).
Therefore, standards for English as a second language are grouped into four areas
which also include a set of attitudes that are equally important at all four key stages:
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1. Comprehension.
1.2. Listening.
1.3. Reading.
2. Production.
1.3. Speaking.
1.4. Writing.
5. Multimodality.
6. Attitudes towards language and communication.
Language and communication is one of the four educational fields in the Curricu-
lum for Basic Education. It is in accordance with all purposes and activities in the cur-
riculum, particularly those directly related to oral and written language.
By the third year of Elementary school, students should have had sufficient time
of exposure to English in order to be familiar with the language as well as to recognize,
understand, and use short, common, familiar and frequently used expressions in oral
and written texts of close, everyday life and familiar contexts. At the same time, they
must show interest and curiosity to learn a language and culture different to their own.
In this school stage, students are expected to:
Communicate personal needs, opinions, requests, as well as short instructions of
known and familiar contexts.
Recognize a repertoire of words used in everyday life contexts.
Respond to written, verbal, and body language.
Locate information on specific topics by using various strategies.
Identify some similarities and differences in cultural expressions of their own lan-
guage and English.
Use a set of expressions in routine exchanges of everyday life.
This stage of development aims at using the skills and knowledge acquired in Eng-
lish at the beginning of the formal education as well as recognizing self-awareness andprogress attained during the time of exposure and contact with the English language. In
this stage, students begin to broaden the use of contextual and linguistic clues to inter-
pret oral and written texts that are known and familiar, and which are connected to the
experience gained in their mother tongue. Although receptive skills are fundamental in
this school stage, the use of well-known expressions begin to play an important role
in the production and interpretation of familiar, common and known oral and written
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texts within the three social learning environments in which the English Curriculum for
Elementary Education is organized.
1. ComprehensionAt this level, language understanding involves the ability to participate in communica-
tive situations related to oneself and the immediate surroundings.
1.1. Listening
Listening comprehension involves the ability to understand the general meaning and
participate in exchanges and short oral texts produced in social environments that use
a familiar repertoire of words.
1.1.1. Identify words and basic expressions commonly used for oneself, the family
and immediate surroundings.
1.1.2. Understand short instructions on known issues or situations.
1.1.3. Identify some differences between types of oral texts.
1.1.4. Detect words that are similar to the mother tongue.
1.1.5. Differentiate some conventions in oral texts.
1.1.6. Understand the general meaning of oral texts based on acoustic characteris-
tics, such as volume and intonation.
1.1.7. Show understanding of appropriate and personal forms of language.
1.1.8. Anticipate the development of routine and familiar situations from tracks in
oral messages.
1.2. Reading
At this level, reading comprehension implies to participate in the recognition of instructions
and basic ads, as well as the search for vocabulary and information on specific topics.
1.2.1. Understand known words as well as short and routine expressions of familiar
and everyday environments.1.2.2. Identify specic words used for asking.
1.2.3. Use strategies such as rereading to help understanding.
1.2.4. Understand brief written instructions.
1.2.5. Identify spelling conventions of words in English.
1.2.6. Identify that both the writing and message conveyed are constant in various
mediums and fonts.
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1.2.7. Understand elements and conventions of writing.
1.2.8. Identify written words as units in between spaces.
1.2.9. Identify the function of typographic features.
1.2.10. Show understanding of the alphabet principles in the reading of words in English.
2. Production
At this level, language production involves the ability to participate in short communi-
cative exchanges of everyday life and familiar contexts through questions, answers,
expressions, opinions and simple statements with known vocabulary.
2.1. Speaking
Speaking involves the ability to assume the role of speaker and/or recipient to partici-
pate in common and short oral exchanges in familiar and known contexts.
2.1.1. Use written texts as a stimulus to produce short and familiar oral texts.
2.1.2. Complete with known expressions the oral contributions of others.
2.1.3. Formulate and respond to familiar questions on topics of immediate need or
common issues.
2.1.4. Participate with some expressions and body language in exchanges of famil-
iar, common and known situations.
2.1.5. Use a basic repertoire of words and expressions to communicate personal
information.
2.1.6. Manage some structures and formulas of routine communication.
2.1.7. Use gesture changes, intonation, and repetition to interact with others.
2.2. Writing
Writing involves both the ability to express opinions and simple requests in familiar con-
texts, such as the writing of personal data to fill out formats and forms.
2.2.1. Write words and short expressions about people or routine events that areknown and close to ones own reality.
2.2.2. Write some personal information using letters and numbers in a conventional way.
2.2.3. Distinguish different conventional ways to organize written texts.
2.2.4. Identify alphabet letters by name or common sounds.
2.2.5. Use words of the surroundings as a model for writing.
2.2.6. Use models of structures to create ones own writing.
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3. Multimodality
3.1. understand the topic of informative texts and short instruction manuals based
on illustrations.
3.2. Identify various graphics to present written texts.
3.3. Recognize the differences in font, colors and images when creating multimodal texts.
3.4. Participate in the singing of songs in English.
3.5. Use body language to complement verbal messages.
3.6. Relate images to words, through oral recitation.
3.7. Follow the reading of texts aloud.
3.8. Notice that writing and the written text are combined and reinforce the message.
4. Attitudes towards language and communication
4.1.Appreciate emotions, cultural traditions, and experiences in literary texts.
4.2. Identify similarities and differences in ways of life.
4.3. Use language and be aware of its effects on others.
4.4. Estimate common cultural expressions in different cultures.
4.5. Show interest in getting to know more about oneself and the environment.
4.6. Promote community coexistence.
4.7. Interact and respond positively to the attempts of reading, listening, speaking,
and writing.
4.8. Act with respect, kindness and courtesy in daily coexistence.
4.9. Show curiosity and interest in learning the English language and using it.
4.10. Respond appropriately to oral instructions.
4.11.Acknowledge the importance of entertainment offered by different cultural ex-
pressions.
4.12.Appreciate the natural environment of Mexico and the world.
4.13. Use knowledge with an ethical and responsible sense.
4.14. Become aware of problems that affect ones own environment
4.15. Understand and promote equality among people.
4.16.Acknowledge the importance of creation through the medium of language.4.17. Appreciate people, their cultures, and languages.
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ENGLISHTEACHINGAPPROACH
Language definition
The NEPBEshares the definition of language expressed in the 2004 Program of Pre-
school Education; the 2006 Spanish syllabus. Secondary. Basic Education; as well as
the 2008 Curricular Parameters. Indigenous Language. Indigenous Elementary School.
Basic education.
Language is a communicative, cognitive, and reflective activity through which we ex-
press, exchange, and defend our ideas; we establish and keep interpersonal relations
and gain access to information; we participate in knowledge building, organize our
thoughts, and reflect on our own discursive and intellectual creation.
Language shows a variety of forms that depend on the communicative purposes,
the interlocutors, the type of text or oral interaction, and on the medium by which the ex-
change is carried out. Writing a letter, for instance, apart from involving creating phras-
es and sentences, implies selecting appropriate expressions that convey the purposeof the author, the circumstances of the recipient and the patterns the writing process
follows. In a similar way, a conversation requires intonation, intensity, rhythm, speed,
and pauses to adjust the meaning of the sentences.6
6 SEP(2006), Educacin bsica. Secundaria. Espaol. Programas de estudio 2006,Mxico, p. 9.
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From this perspective, learning a language implies to acquire rules of use socially
imposed (implicit) and the ways of using them in different social environments where
people participate, in order to:
Communicate ideas and convey feelings.
Establish and develop relationships with people.
Gain access to information.
Build up knowledge.
Organize thoughts.
Accordingly, the NEPBElike the Spanish syllabuses and the curricular param-
eters of indigenous languages is far from omitting or excluding the formal study of
language structure or narrowing it to the study of uses and functions. It establishes
an approach to teaching in which the capacity to reflect on language is closely
related to the communicative functions of language, whose purpose is to analyze
and improve the communicative competence of students. Therefore, not only does
it take into account linguistic but also cultural learning, since one of its functions is
socialization, the purpose of which is for students to relate with each other, to prog-
ress and reconstruct the social world they live in.
From this perspective, to claim that the teaching approach that underpins language
studies minimizes or ignores the importance of grammatical learning in the classroom
is inexact and ill-favored due to the fact that this teaching approach promotes and
encourages reflection on the linguistic aspect of the language, its functions, and com-
municative uses, considering that both are necessary to attain the effective and suc-
cessful participation of students in social practices of the language proper to the XXI
century societies.
Social practices of the language
Social practices of the language represent the core referent in the definition of
NEPBEs contents. This decision complies with the approach for language teaching
adopted by SEP, as stated in the syllabuses of subjects, such as Spanish and Indig-enous Language:
Social practices of the language are patterns or ways of interaction, which, apart
from production and interpretation of spoken and written texts, include several ac-
tivities linked to them. Every practice has a specific communicative purpose and a
history linked to a particular cultural situation. For instance, nowadays, the spoken
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language practices used in dialogues vary quite often. The dialogue is established
or kept according to social and communicative conventions of the culture where the
exchange takes place.7
Given the status of English as a non-native language and the changes derived fromits implementation as a subject in the national curricula, a series ofspecific competencies
besides thesocial practices of the languageare established to define the contents of
this subject. Thespecific competencesare conceived as complex and articulated con-
figurations of the doing with, knowing about, and being through the language, whose
purpose is to preserve the formal aspects and functions of the language within social life.
Thus, these competencies comprise three types of components of a different na-
ture, which define the curricular contents:
a) Doing with the language. This content corresponds to the communicative actions
carried out in concrete interactive situations which, besides the production and interpre-
tation of oral and written texts, are necessary to accomplish the communicative aim asso-
ciated with participating in specific competencies. Other reason is that individuals learn
to talk and interact with others while being in the same context. They learn to interpret
and produce texts (in spoken and written form), to reflect on them, to identify problems
and solve them, to transform them and create new genres, graphic formats and mediums;
in other words, to interact with texts and with other individuals who are linked to them. 8
Therefore, the teaching treatment for this type of contents entails, on the part of the
teacher, a planning that guarantees that the students will learn by doing; that is to say,
they learn to listen by listening, to speak by speaking, to read by reading, and to write
by writing in real communicative situations and with different purposes.
As a result, the contents of doing with the language are not to be conceived as
a simple list of instructions or things to do with students, but as curricular contents,
whose clear intention is to teach what a competent English speaker knows how to do
to successfully participate in social practices of the language in different social spheres
where he/she interacts. For example, in order to record information on a specific topic,
it is necessary to know the purpose of that information (a conference, a community
exhibition, to convince someone to do something, etc.), to recognize the intended audi-
ence (children, young adults, well-known or unknown people, etc.), to identify where tofind the information, what sources to use (books, newspapers, specialized texts, etc.)
or how to look for it (key words, dictionaries, etc.).
7 Ibidem, p. 11.8 Ibid, p. 12.
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The contents of doing with the language are organized in a sequence that articu-
lates the rest of the contents knowing about the language and being through the
language in a cyclic and recurrent way. This has the purpose of helping teachers to
plan the necessary stages for creating a product, solve a problem, attain a specific goal,
and decide when and how to address the knowledge about the language required todevelop the previously planned stages.
In the case of the teaching of a non-native language, this approach is fundamental
since the functions of the language guarantee that practice is meaningful to students
and similar to what they will face in real life. Therefore, it is necessary to develop ways
to organize the educational work as shown in the following chart.
GUIDELINES TOORGANIZEEDUCATIONALWORK
Plan communicative situationsthat:
Articulate the curricular contents (doing with, knowing about, and being through the language) in a
process that involves an initial, development and closing phase.
Foster cooperative work, i.e. distribute actions that involve responsibilities among students, offer
opportunities in which everyone participates, make sure couples exchange knowledge and are aware
of what they need to learn.
Allow to foresee difficulties and possible solutions as well as to evaluate each stage and the process as
a whole.
Ease the way to approach unknown or particularly difficult contents that require an in-depth treatment
to continue with the process and obtain the intended product.
Boost the students self-esteem and confidence in the use of English.
Guarantee the development ofroutine activitiesthat:
Instead of being prescribed, they should be the product of consensus and negotiation between teacher
and students.
Foster confidence in students in the classroom, give a sense of belonging to the class, extend learning,
and allow the processes to be more efficient in this case, the classroom.
It is important to stress that routine activities are not prescriptive; whether they
are included or not, depends on the students and the teachers interests and needs.
However, since they represent the opportunity for students to decide what to do
with the language (reading a story, listening to a song, etc.), it is suggested to con-sider a specific schedule destined to this through the school year, e.g. one session
a month.
b) Knowing about the language. This type of contents involves a series of aspects, con-
cepts, and topics for reflection on features, characteristics, and elements of the language,
aiming at students to raise awareness about their knowledge, know aspects of the lan-
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guage they had not reflected on before, and develop greater confidence and versatility to
use the language. The purpose of learning more about grammar, increasing vocabulary,
getting acquainted with writing conventions is to improve the students skills for reading,
writing, speaking, and listening. This is why it is fundamental to introduce students to a
challenge of oral or written interaction in a real communicative situation -such as creatinga product, reaching a goal or solving a problem- in which they want to succeed, so that
reflection on the language processes makes sense and stimulate interest and motivation
to learn. Therefore, the teaching treatment that implies this type of contents will depend
on what the students need to know to successfully overcome the challenges they will
face when participating in specific activities with the language throughout the school year.
On the other hand, there will be times when it becomes necessary to formulate
explicitly knowledge about the linguistic system and resources of the oral and written
texts. In these cases, students own needs and difficulties will let the teacher determine
which contents of knowing about the language and to what extent they will require a
specific teaching treatment, as this will allow students to progress and be successful in
the tasks prepared for each stage of the process.
On this basis, these contents are not expected to be totally covered or to be treated
in the same way or extent. This is why specific suggestions or examples are provided
only when they are essential to an activity.
It must be acknowledged that to understand and produce oral and written texts in
real communicative contexts involves besides the linguistic knowledge itself, a series
of abilities and strategies. Although these belong to the field of the pragmatic use of
the language, they are also part of a cognitive field, since they imply generating ideas,
selecting information, making outlines, etc. This recognition entails that depending on
the communicative situation, the use of language is intentional, and it is regulated by
the cognitive abilities and strategies that are put into practice.
c) Being through the language. These contents refer to aspects related to the role of
intercultural education in general and to language diversity in particular as well as the
multiple functions they carry out and the attitudes and values underlying oral and written
interaction. Their goal, on one hand, is to increase the opportunities for students to share
their knowledge and experiences with the English language through socializing the differ-
ent products obtained during the work through tasks in and out of school of the variousproducts obtained; on the other hand, it is to appreciate the importance of fostering a
harmonious, effective, tolerant, and inclusive atmosphere of communication.
Being through the language contents are transverse and permanent throughout
the entire NEPBE. Students must become aware of their own culture and that of other
countries; they must learn how to act with the language in different environments of
social life and value the consequences of their actions. For this reason, these contents
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have a specific place within the syllabuses. However, given their traverse nature, the
treatment of this type of contents should not be limited to a particular moment; on the
contrary, they should be present in a permanent way.
In conclusion, far from reducing the curriculum content to a disjointed and out-of-
context teaching of skills, knowledge, and values of the structure of the target language,it is expected that the teaching of English be the same approach as the other two lan-
guage subjects. In other words, to provide an education that preserves the functions
and uses of language in social life. From this perspective, the problem is not when to
begin teaching a non-native language before literacy in the mother tongue, but rather
why, what, and how to teach and learn this language. Hence, the contact with social
practices of the language and specific competencies derived from the former should
be included since the initial grades of Basic Education (3rdPreschool, 1stand 2ndgrades
of Elementary school), as the presence, contact, and familiarization with these specific
practices and competencies provide the basis to guarantee:
Acknowledgment of the linguistic and cultural diversity of our country and the world
that facilitates the promotion and development of positive, appropriate, and flexible
attitudes required for the understanding among people and nations.
Confidence in the capacity of learning and being able to communicate in more than
one language.
Broadening of opportunities to interact with the oral and written language that is to
say, to think about it, question it, compare it, and use it, amongst others.
Finally, it is important to stress that one of the conditions for learning a language is
to understand the situation where it is used. For this reason, it is fundamental that the
learning of English language be centered on the students experiences and interests
when engaging in communicative situations. Therefore, students are not expected to
master English as a native speaker, nonetheless the necessary actions are prescribed
to reach the purposes and achievements established in the cycles of the NEPBE.
Social learning environments
Unlike the students mother tongue (Spanish or an indigenous language), English is not
present in most of their social environments due to its condition of non-native language.
This makes it fundamental to promote social uses of this language in the classroom by
creating social learning environments that compensate the absence of English in the
out-of-school context. Their implementation provides opportunities to learn the diverse
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communicative registers and formats necessary to participate successfully and with
autonomy in everyday practices of the language in social life.
Social environments contribute to create language learning conditions, in this case
English, since they entail the development of collective activities that favor exchange
among peers, making sure every participant knows what to do and what s/he needsto learn to successfully overcome the challenge of communicating in English with a
specific social purpose.
Incorporating a non-native language into the national curriculum implies accord-
ing to one of the objectives of the Common European Framework of Reference: Learn-
ing, Teaching, Assessment stressing the relationship between the languages so that
both can benefit from the exchange:
The plurilingual approach emphasizes the fact that as an individual persons experi-
ence of language in its cultural contexts expands [] he or she does not keep these
languages and cultures in strictly separated mental compartments, but rather builds
up a communicative competence to which all knowledge and experience of language
contributes and in which languages interrelate and interact.9
From this perspective, it is assumed that no linguistic variety is better than other;
therefore, rather than a correct or incorrect way of speaking English, there are appro-
priate or inappropriate uses depending on the situation where communication takes
place. Thus,the aim is to establish spheres of usage in the classroom, and in the case
of English, to generate intentionally social environments in the classroom in order to
recreate specific communicative situations.
It is through participating in social practices of the language in diverse social envi-
ronments that the conditions to acknowledge the following aspects will emerge:
A linguistic use and its characteristics.
Students linguistic competence.
Type of errors made (systematic or casual).
Attitudes in communicative interactions.
Values students give to events and people.
9Council of Europe (2002), The Common European Framework of Reference for Languages: Learning, Tea-
ching, Assessment, Instituto Cervantes (trad.), Madrid, Ministerio de Educacin, Cultura y Deporte-Subdi-
reccin General de Cooperacin Internacional/Secretara General Tcnica del MECD-Subdireccin General
de Informacin y Publicaciones/Anaya, p. 4. Available at: http://cvc.Cervantes.Es/obref/marco.
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Familiar and community environment
In this environment, students should approach English through situations that are close
to them, known, and familiar, in order to foster a higher self-esteem and confidence in
their own capacity to learn. Thus, the basis and necessary conditions are set so that by
means of the doing with the language students can activate knowledge and val-ues, as well as build and generate meaning in oral and written communication, real or
semi-real situations, within a known context.
Literary and ludic environment
This environment focuses on the approximation to literature through participating in
reading, writing, and oral exchanges in order to activate students experiences and
knowledge so that they share and contrast their interpretations and opinions. This gen-
erates the necessary learning conditions for them to participate in a social construction
to broaden their socio-cultural horizons and to value beliefs and expressions different
from their own.
This social environment intends to foster a freer and more creative attitude, to
encourage students to appreciate and value other cultures, to go beyond their im-
mediate environment, to discover the creative power of the word and experience the
aesthetic enjoyment that diversity and literary fiction can produce.10Therefore, it is
in this learning environment where students get an opportunity to play with words (by
speaking and writing), using either their own or others literary texts of interest to the
teacher and the students.
Academic and educational environment
In this environment, social practices of the language emphasize the strategies required to
learn and study in situations where students use formal and academic language both in
oral and written texts. The purpose of this environment is for students to participate in oral
and written situations that imply acting in and out of the classroom and continue learning
to successfully face the challenges of our present world. Therefore, in this environment
the emphasis is on the learning strategies that will allow students to adjust their compre-
hension (listening/reading) and production processes (speaking/writing) in order to iden-tify meanings and solve problems that arise to fulfill the aimed goals. In this environment
students are expected to learn how to participate with language as a social practice that
includes knowing about different areas of knowledge.
10SEP(2006), Educacin bsica. Secundaria. Programas de estudio 2006, Espaol, Mxico, p. 17.
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ASSESSMENT
It is convenient to consider that the purpose of this cycle is to record the level of
progress attained in routine work and any changes or adaptations required by any
component of the teaching practice (teacher training, educational resources, syllabus-
es, infrastructure, etc.) to reach the goals established during the school year. From this
perspective, the assessment of each stage in Cycle 2 involves promotion, even though
it also has a formative educational function, and it should be:
Global, because it considers the students target language skills as a whole and
does not isolate or break them down into fragments.
Continuous, because it takes into consideration work and performance done
throughout the development of the stages of the communicative situation, not only
the final product.
Formative, because it is a continuous process of uninterrupted gathering of evi-
dence and qualitative data on the students performance; that is, their strong and
weak points, so that positive and effective feedback among students and betweenthem and the teacher is guaranteed.
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CONTENTORGANIZATION
In order to cover the social practices of the language in this cycle it is necessary that
teachers check and reflect on the following:
The object of study of the subject corresponds to the social practices of the lan-
guagewhich articulate the school grades in each cycle of the NEPBE. At the same
time, the social practices and the specific competencies that derive from the lan-
guage are the ones that allow the gathering and sequencing of contents of different
nature: doing with, knowing about, and being through the language.
The social practices of the language and specific competencies with the language
have been distributed and organized in three amplesocial learning environments:
Familiar and community, Literary and ludic, and Academic and educational.
The curriculum contents (doing with, knowing about, and being through the
language) are displayed in the central column of the charts. The contents of doing
with the language are in bold, since it is the teacher who determines, depending on
the students needs and characteristics, which ones to use, to what extent and inwhat order to plan their teaching and learning. In order to help teachers in the type of
actions and knowledge expected to be covered with these contents, some of them
are further explained and are signaled by a bullet to distinguish them, and are ruled
by the same principle of the curricular contents: it is not expected that all actions and
knowledge included are carried out, or that the proposed order or time established is
followed, or covered in depth. In the case of contents of knowing about and being
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through the language, it is necessary to emphasize that the list is neither restrictive
(different contents can be approached), nor exhaustive (since their treatment follows
similar guidelines to the doing with contents).
The proposal ofachievementspresented in the left column of the charts is intended
to provide teachers with performance evidences about the learning of knowledge,
actions, values, and attitudes that students are expected to acquire, in order to as-
sess their progress and performance in their competence in English.
On the right column of the chart, actions to make a productare suggested. For
this purpose, it is necessary to articulate the curricular contents shown in the cen-
tral column. However, the teacher may use other methodological strategies (e.g.,
the solution of a problem or a goal achievement), provided that they guarantee to
achieve the purposes and expected learning established by each cycle.
Cycle 2. Distribution of social practices of thelanguage by environment
ACCESSANDAPPROXIMATIONA1: 3rdAND4 thGRADESE LEMENTARYSCHOOL
FAMILIARANDCOMMUNITY
ENVIRONMENT
LITERARYANDLUDICENVIRONMENT
ACADEMICANDEDUCATIONAL
ENVIRONMENT
Talk and write to participate
in everyday dialogues.
Read and sing songs. Give and receive instructions
to make objects and record
information.
Offer and receive information
about oneself and
acquaintances.
Play with words, and read
and write for expressive and
aesthetic purposes.
Formulate and answer
questions in order to find
information about a specific
topic.
Listen to and express
immediate practical needs.
Read narrative texts and
recognize cultural expressions
from English-speaking
countries.
Record and interpret
information in a graphic.
Interpret messages
in advertisements.
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Cycle 2. Distribution of social practices of thelanguage by environment and grade
Familiar and community environment
SOCIALPRACTICESOFTHELANGUAGE
SPECIFICCOMPETENCIESWITHTHELANGUAGE
3rdGRADEE LEMENTARYSCHOOL 4thGRADEE LEMENTARYSCHOOL
TALKANDWRITETOPARTICIPATEIN EVERYDAYDIALOGUES.
Recognize expressions
related to personal
expectations for the school
year in a dialogue.
Interpret a dialogue about
school-related concerns.
OFFERAN DRECEIVEINFORMATIONABOUTONESELFANDACQUAINTANCES.
Understand information
about ones own and
others daily routines.
Offer and interpret
information about personal
experiences.
LISTENTOANDEXPRESSIMMEDIATEPRACTICALNEEDS.
Identify and understandexpressions to get whatone wants or needs fromothers.
Interpret and produce
expressions to offer help.
INTREPETMESSAGES INADVERTISEMENTS.
Identify and understand
messages in community
advertisements.
Interpret messages
in advertisements of
commercial products.
Literary and ludic environment
SOCIALPRACTICESOFTHELANGUAGE
SPECIFICCOMPETENCIESWITHTHELANGUAGE
3rdGRADEE LEMENTARYSCHOOL
4thGRADEELEMENTARYSCHOOL
READANDSINGSONGS. Read and sing a traditional
childrens song.
Interpret and sing songs of
interest to the class.
PLAYWITHWORDS, ANDREADANDWRITEFOREXPRESSIVE ANDAESTHETICPURPOSES.
Make language games
to find words through
crossword puzzles.
Recreate language games
to recite and write tongue-
twisters.
READNARRATIVETEXTSANDRECOGNIZECULTURALEXPRESSIONS FROMENGLISH-SPEAKINGCOUNTRIES.
Read childrens stories
and appreciate cultural
expressions from English-
speaking countries.
Read childrens legends
and appreciate cultural
expressions from English-
speaking countries.
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Academic and e ducational environment
SOCIALPRACTICES
OF THELANGUAGE
SPECIFICCOMPETENCIES
3rdGRADEE LEMENTARYSCHOOL
4thGRADEE LEMENTARYSCHOOL
GIVEANDRECEIVEINSTRUCTIONS TOMAKEOBJECTSANDRECORDINFORMATION.
Follow the steps of a setof instructions to make an
object.
Give and receiveinstructions to interpret
and record information
on a calendar.
FORMULATEANDANSWERQUESTIONSIN ORDERTOFINDINFORMATIONABOUTASPECIFICTOPIC.
Identify and ask questions
to look for information
about a specific topic.
Formulate and answer
questions to obtain
information about a
specific topic.
RECORDANDINTERPRETINFORMATIONINAGRAPHICRESOURCE.
Find and interpret
information in a graphic
resource.
Record and interpret
information in a graphic.
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3rdGRADEELEMENTARYSCHOOL
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41Third grade Elementary school
Unit 1
SOCIALPRACTICEOF THELANGUAGE: TALKANDWRITETOPARTICIPATEINEVERYDAYDIALOGUES
ENVIRONMENT: FAMILIARANDCOMMUNITY
SPECIFICCOMPETENCY: Recognize expressions related to personal expectations for the school year in a dialogue
ACHIEVEMENTS CONTENTS PRODUCT
Identifies topic and purpose.
Identifies speakers in a dialogue.
Notices tone, rhythm, and pauses.
Uses contextual clues to understand
meaning.
DOINGWITHTHELANGUAGE
listen to expressions related to the
expectations.
Predict main idea.
Identify topic, purpose, and intended
audience.
Identify turns of participation.
Notice tone, rhythm, pauses, and
intonation.
Identify the structure of dialogues.
Understand the content of a dialogue.
Identify statements that expressexpectations.
Use contextual clues.
Read statements out loud.
Participate in oral exchanges.
Express expectations.
Assume speakers role in order to practice
pronunciation.
Participate in the writing of expectation
expressions.
Compare parts of sentences.
Complete sentences.
Write sentences based on a model.
Check spelling and punctuation
conventions.
KNOWINGABOUTTHELANGUAGE
Structure of dialogues: opening, body, and
closure.
Topic, purpose, and intended audience.
Contextual clues: non-verbal language.
Acoustic characteristics: vo lume, tone
(hope, aggressiveness, mood, etc.), and
rhythm.
List of suitable words.
Verb tenses: future (will/going to). Personal pronouns.
Spelling.
Punctuation.
BEINGTHROUGHTHELANGUAGE
Use language as a means of expressing
expectations, desires, purposes, and
intentions.
Show a respectful attitude towards the
interventions of others.
ILLUSTRATEDDIALOGUES
Choose a classmate and decide how
many sentences the dialogue will contain.
Decide on the turns of participation.
Write the sentences on the cards in the
order that corresponds to each turn.
Check, in pairs first and then with the
teacher, that the writing of sentences
is complete and complies with spelling
conventions.
Add the illustrations.
Engage in oral dialogue while reading the
sentences out loud. Exchange cards with other pairs of
students in order to get to know the
expectations of classmates, as well as
practicing pronunciation and intonation in
a dialogue.
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42 Third grade Elementary school
SOCIALPRACTICEOFTHELANGUAGE: READANDSINGSONGS
ENVIRONMENT: LITERARYANDLUDIC
SPECIFICCOMPETENCY:Read and sing a traditional childrens song
ACHIEVEMENTS CONTENTS PRODUCT
Identifies rhymes or repeated sounds.
Identifies the organization and structure of
songs.
Reads verses and stanzas aloud.
DOINGWITHTHELANGUAGE
Listen to and explore lyrics of illustrated songs.Relate a song to personal experiences.
Recognize topic, purpose, and intended
audience.
Predict topic.
Distinguish organization and structure.
Listen to and follow the reading aloud of
song lyrics.
Understand the meaning of verses and
stanzas.
Follow the rhythm of a song using sound
resources.
Identify words that rhyme.
Repeat and use rhyme in verses to identify
sounds.
Recognize changes in intonation.
Read stanzas out loud.
Identify parts in the writing of songs.
Find words in a song based on questions.
Say words in a song with consonant
clusters or letters that are less frequent or
absent in the native language.
Establish relationships between the written
form and the pronunciation of song lyrics.
Sing songs.
KNOWINGABOUTTHELANGUAGE
Structure of song lyrics: stanzas,
choruses, and verses.
Textual components.
Topic, purpose, and intended audience.
Contextual clues.
Acoustic characteristics.
List of suitable words.
Verse formation.
Pronunciation: non-frequent or absent
consonant clusters in the mother tongue
(tw, ph, st, ch, wh, etc.).
Conventional letter-sound
correspondences.
Spelling.
Conventional writing of words withoutalterations, replacements or omissions.
Punctuation: period.
BEINGTHROUGHTHELANGUAGE
Value song lyrics as a reflection of
emotions and experiences.
Show appreciation for cultural expressions
particular to the English language.
Acknowledge the social use given to
typical songs from English-speaking
countries.
CHILDRENSSONG
Assign the stanzas among teams andrehearse their performance.
Reproduce the lyrics of the song on a
poster.
Practice the chorus of the song with the
class.
Record the song or rehearse it to perform
it in public.
Present the recording or live performance
to an audience selected by the group
and the teacher.
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43Third grade Elementary school
Unit 2
SOCIALPRACTICEOF THELANGUAGE: GIVEANDRECEIVEINSTRUCTIONS TOMAKEOBJECTSANDRECORDINFORMATION
ENVIRONMENT: EDUCATIONALANDACADEMIC
SPECIFICCOMPETENCY:Follow the steps of a set of instructions to make an object
ACHIEVEMENTS CONTENTS PRODUCT
Identifies purpose and intended audience.
Identifies components of a set of
instructions.
Completes instructions.
Identifies the order of instructions in a
sequence.
Finds differences and similarities between
words.
Writes, both in numbers and in letters,
ordinal and cardinal numbers.
DOINGWITHTHELANGUAGE
Listen to and understand instructions to
make a simple object (rattle, drum, etc.).
Identify topic, purpose, and intended
audience.
Observe the distribution of graphic
and textual components of a set of
instructions.
Associate an instruction with an image.
Clarify meaning of words.
Identify cardinal and ordinal numbers.
Participate in the writing of a set of
instructions.
Determine the number of instructions or
steps.
Distinguish instructions from list of
materials.
Write ordinal and cardinal numbers.
Dictate words to complete instructions.
Identify differences and similarities in the
writing of words.
Read aloud a set of instructions.
Identify stress and intonation in words.
Identify consonant sounds.
Identify actions in instructions or steps.
Practice reading of instructions or steps.
Identify use and purpose of the object a
set of instructions refers to.
KNOWINGABOUTTHELANGUAGE
Structure of a set of instructions.
Topic, purpose, and intended audience.
Graphic and textual components.
List of suitable words.
Type of sentences.
Semantic fields.
Consonant clusters absent or non-
frequent in the mother tongue.Conventional writing of words without
alterations, replacements or omissions.
Upper and lower-case letters.
Punctuation.
BEINGTHROUGHTHELANGUAGE
Use language as a means of sharing and
learning about cultural expressions.
SET OFINSTRUCTIONS
Plan the writing of the set of instructions
based on its structure: title, subtitles,
list of materials, sequence of steps or
instructions and illustrations.
Write the draft of the set of instructions
including all of its components, based on
a model.
Check the set of instructions with the
members of the team and then with the
teacher to make sure it is complete,
instructions are in the correct order,
and its writing complies with spelling
conventions.
Write the final version of the set of
instructions and include graphics that
explain the steps to make the object.
Use the set of instructions to make the
object.
Use and share the object with other
group members.
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44 Third grade Elementary school
SOCIALPRACTICEOFTHELANGUAGE: OFFERANDRECEIVEINFORMATIONABOUTONESELFANDACQUAINTANCES
ENVIRONMENT: FAMILIARANDCOMMUNITY
SPECIFICCOMPETENCY: Understand information about ones own and others daily routines
ACHIEVEMENTS CONTENTS PRODUCT
Identifies, in oral and written form, words
that describe daily routines.
Understands and expresses schedules.
Follows and gives instructions to carry out
daily routines.
Identifies differences and similarities in the
writing of daily routines.
Dictates words.
DOINGWITHTHELANGUAGE
Listen to lists of daily routines.
Predict types of daily routines.
Identify topic, purpose, and intended
audience.
Clarify doubts about the meaning of
words.
Perform actions of daily routines while
mentioning them.
Identify names of moments of the day in
which daily routines are carried out.
Identify expressions that convey the
activities.
Complete expressions.
Participate in the reading of statements.
Read statements out loud.
Identify parts in a statement.
Identify actions described in a statement.
Compare statements and identify their
differences and similarities.
Classify activities according to the type of
words used to convey an action.
Write statements.
Order sentences according to the part of
the day when the described activities take
place.
Dictate words that make up statements. Enlist statements.
Check spelling and punctuation
conventions.
KNOWINGABOUTTHELANGUAGE
Typographical resources: dashes and
bullets.
List of suitable words.
Acoustic segmentation of words.
Types of sentences.
Conventional writing of words without
alterations, replacements or omissions.
Upper and lower-case letters.
BEINGTHROUGHTHELANGUAGE
Show integration and a sense of
belongingness within a social group with
shared activities.
Avoid the use of offensive illustrations or
descriptions.
Use basic rules of exchange in a dialogue:
listening, looking at the speaker, and
respecting turns of participation.
LISTOF ACTIVITIES
State daily routines to be described: have
breakfast, shower, commute to school,
etc.
Plan the writing of statements to
make the list, considering the number
of statements and the order in a
chronological sequence.
Enlist in written form the statements that
correspond to the activities, according to
the planned sequence.
Include illustrations that represent the
activities stated in the sentences.
Check that the writing of statements is
complete and complies with spelling
conventions, in pairs first and then with
help from the teacher.
Compare the lists and decide the format
in which they shall be presented (sign,
card, etc.).
Show the lists to an audience chosen by
the group and the teacher.
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45Third grade Elementary school
Unit 3
SOCIALPRACTICEOFTHELANGUAGE: PLAYWITHWORDS, ANDREADANDWRITEFOREXPRESSIVEANDAESTHETICPURPOSES
ENVIRONMENT: LITERARYANDLUDIC
SPECIFICCOMPETENCY:Make language games to find words through crossword puzzles
ACHIEVEMENTS CONTENTS PRODUCT
Reads and writes words.
Uses the illustrated bilingual dictionary to
clarify the meaning of words.
Compares the composition of words.
Spells out words.
DOINGWITHTHELANGUAGE
Explore thematic childrens crosswords.
Identify the name of the game: crossword.
Identify purpose and topic.
Distinguish textual and graphic
components.
Detect writing directionality in crosswords.
Identify the writing of textual components.
Say the names of graphic components.
Establish the relationship between
numbers in clues and numbers in a
graphic.
Identify information provided by clues to
discover the words.
Find out the meaning of new words.
Read clues out loud and discover the
missing words.
Spell out newfound words.
Count letters.
In a graphic, look for the column or row
that corresponds to the number of letters
of the newfound word.
Write the words in the columns or rows.
Practice spelling.
KNOWINGABOUTTHELANGUAGE
Textual components: subtitles, lists of
clues, and numbers.
Graphic components: columns, lines, and
numbers.
Writing directionality of words in a
crossword.
Purpose of crosswords.
List of suitable words.
Diphthongs.
Differences in the conventional word-
sound correspondence between themother tongue and English.
BEINGTHROUGHTHELANGUAGE
Use written language as a means of
entertainment.
Appreciate cultural expressions that are
similar in Mexico and in English-speaking
countries.
CROSSWORD
Select the topics and choose the words
that will be found in the crossword.
Suggest the clues to discover the
words in the crossword.
Write the words based on a model.
Check that the writing of the clues
complies with spelling conventions.
Write the final version of the clues and
the crossword graphic, considering
that the number of columns, rows and
squares is enough for the amount of
clues and the amount of letters in
words, respectively.
Check that the letters of words adjust to
the squares destined for them.
Solve the crossword orally by spelling out
the words to be discovered.
Share the crossword with other groups.
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46 Third grade Elementary school
SOCIALPRACTICEOF THELANGUAGE: FORMULATEANDANSWERQUESTIONSINORDERTOFINDINFORMATIONABOUTASPECIFICTOPIC
ENVIRONMENT: EDUCATIONALANDACADEMIC
SPECIFICCOMPETENCY: Identify and ask questions to look for information about a specific topic
ACHIEVEMENTS CONTENTS PRODUCT
Identifies topics through illustrations.
Understands questions to obtain
information.
Completes interrogative sentences with
question words.
Identifies question formation.
Identifies the order of words in questions.
Selects words to ask questions.
DOINGWITHTHELANGUAGEExplore illustrations about specific science-
related topics.
Compare differences and similarities
between illustrations.
Classify illustrations according to topic.
Identify purpose.
Complete questions.
Listen to and understand questions.
Complete interrogative sentences with
question words.
Identify intonation in questions.
Identify words that make up questions.
Participate in the writing of questions to
obtain information.
Identify composition of words.
Identify question words in interrogative
sentences.
Detect word order in questions.
Formulate questions orally.
Complete interrogative sentences using
question words.
Repeat questions in order to practice
pronunciation.
Dictate questions to look for information.
Check spelling and punctuation
conventions.
KNOWINGABOUTTHELANGUAGE
Topic, purpose, and intended audience of
questions.
Contextual clues.
Acoustic characteristics.
Question words.
Verb forms: auxiliaries, and copulative
verb.
Type of sentences: interrogative.
Verb tenses: present.
Word segmentation in the acoustic chain. Punctuation.
BEINGTHROUGHTHELANGUAGE
Use language as a means of obtaining
information.
Show interest in new knowledge.
Respect and value others proposals.
GUIDEOF CURIOUSQUESTIONS. Choose images of a science-related
topic.
Decide, based on the images, what
aspects of the topic will be asked to
obtain information.
Write questions about the aspects of the
topic, based on a model.
Check that questions are
understandable, follow the words order
in questions, and comply with spelling
conventions.
Write the final version of the questions
on white sheets of paper in the form of a
guide and include images.
Exchange the questionnaires among
teams and practice reading the
questions.
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